Cost & Prices
At the starting degree 11 (no bonus, no malus), indicative monthly costs for a mid-range vehicle are:
| Coverage tier | Monthly (degree 11) | Monthly (degree −3) |
|---|---|---|
| Third-party RC only | €30–50 | €15–22 |
| Mini Casco | €60–90 | €30–50 |
| Full Casco | €90–150 | €45–75 |
For a first-time driver at degree 11 with a recent vehicle, full Casco typically runs €120 to €180 per month. The price gap between the cheapest and most expensive insurer for the same profile reaches 40%, which is why obtaining at least two quotes is always worthwhile.
Gross premiums are 30 to 50% higher in Luxembourg than equivalent French contracts. Three structural advantages partially offset this:
- No deductible: Luxembourg Casco typically has zero excess, while French contracts apply €150 to €500. This means Luxembourg pays full claims on every covered event, including small ones.
- Tax deduction: RC premiums are deductible up to €672 per person per year under Article 111 LIR. A couple saves roughly €520 to €800 in income tax per year depending on their marginal rate.
- Partial malus: a Luxembourg at-fault claim only increases the RC component of the premium, not the entire contract. The French malus applies to the full premium.
In net terms after these advantages, the effective cost difference is much smaller than the headline premium gap suggests.
Five concrete levers, in order of impact:
- Protect your bonus-malus. At degree -3 vs degree 11, you pay 45% vs 100% of the base RC premium — a 55% difference on the RC component alone.
- Match coverage to vehicle age. A vehicle over seven years old or worth under €10,000 rarely justifies full Casco. Dropping to Mini Casco saves 30 to 50% of the Casco component.
- Use the Article 111 LIR deduction. Request a fiscal attestation from your insurer each January and declare the RC portion. Net saving: €150 to €300 per year depending on your tax bracket.
- Consider per-kilometre pricing. AXA OptiDrive and Baloise Drive both offer mileage-based options. Under 10,000 km per year, savings reach 15 to 25%.
- Get two or three quotes. The same profile can differ by 40% between the four insurers. Never renew without checking at least one competitor.
AXA OptiDrive and Baloise Drive both offer mileage-based pricing. AXA requires no telematics device — you declare a bracket and the premium adjusts. This is particularly well-suited to cross-border workers who commute by public transport and only use their car occasionally, or to second vehicles in multi-car households. Under 10,000 km per year, per-kilometre pricing typically saves 15 to 25% versus standard annual contracts. LALUX and Foyer do not currently offer mileage-based options.
Coverage Types
Mini Casco is the intermediate tier. It adds theft, fire, glass breakage, natural events (hail, storm, flood), and animal collision on top of mandatory RC — but does not cover your own vehicle damage in an at-fault accident. That requires full Casco.
Suitable for: vehicles aged three to seven years, valued €10,000 to €20,000, with experienced drivers holding a good bonus.
Not suitable for: vehicles under two years old, leased or financed vehicles (which contractually require full Casco), or new drivers at degree 11 whose statistical at-fault risk is higher.
Luxembourg distinguishes itself with no standard deductible even on Mini Casco claims — glass replacement, hail damage and theft are settled in full.
Mostly no — and this is Luxembourg's most distinctive market feature. LALUX explicitly confirms zero deductible on all easyPROTECT formulas, including glass claims. Baloise Drive similarly applies no standard excess.
Exceptions exist: AXA's conditions générales specify a deductible in specific circumstances for inexperienced drivers — verify the current amount directly with AXA before subscribing. Foyer moov applies excesses across its Silver and Gold formulas as part of its lower-premium model. For LALUX easyPROTECT and Baloise Drive, zero deductible is the standard across covered claims.
RC insurance covers the people you harm in an accident — it does not cover you as the driver. If you cause an accident and injure yourself, you receive nothing from RC. Driver personal accident cover fills that gap by paying:
- Permanent disability capital (partial or total)
- Temporary work incapacity indemnity
- Medical expenses not reimbursed by the CNS or social security
- Death benefit to your dependants
Baloise Drive includes it in every formula at no extra cost — the only Luxembourg insurer to do so. LALUX, AXA and Foyer charge an additional premium. It is also eligible for the Article 111 LIR tax deduction alongside the RC component, making its real net cost lower than listed.
Yes. Luxembourg RC insurance is valid in all Green Card countries, which includes every EU member state, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein. Cross-border workers driving daily to France, Belgium or Germany are fully covered for RC liability throughout those countries without any surcharge or extension.
If you have a Casco guarantee, material damage coverage may be limited to the countries specified in your conditions générales — check your policy schedule. For countries outside the Green Card zone (such as Morocco, Turkey or Russia), a separate extension may be required — verify before travelling.
Bonus-Malus
Luxembourg runs two parallel bonus-malus systems that operate independently:
RC bonus-malus (legally mandated): defined by the Grand-Ducal Regulation of 11 November 2003. Scale: degree -3 (45% of base premium) to degree 22 (250%). All new drivers start at degree 11 (100%). Each claim-free year subtracts one degree; each at-fault claim adds three. It takes 14 consecutive claim-free years to reach degree -3 from scratch.
Material Damage (Casco) bonus-malus: freely set by each insurer. There is no legally prescribed scale. Only at-fault material damage claims affect it — glass, theft, hail and animal collision claims do not move the Casco degree, regardless of payout amount.
The bonus-malus belongs to the driver, not the vehicle. It follows you when you change insurer (RC scale), and may be recognised by a new insurer when you change (Casco scale, at their discretion).
Starting from degree 11 with zero at-fault claims: 14 consecutive claim-free years. The scale is -1 degree per year. At degree -3 you pay only 45% of the RC base premium, confirmed by the CAA and all four insurers.
In practice, most of the premium reduction happens in the first six to eight years. A driver who has driven five years without fault is at degree 6, which already brings a significant premium reduction. The incremental gain from degree 1 to degree -3 is smaller in absolute terms.
An at-fault claim moves you up three degrees and takes three subsequent claim-free years to return to the same degree — making bonus preservation particularly valuable near the bottom of the scale.
Claims that NEVER affect your bonus-malus (RC or Casco):
- Glass breakage (windscreen, side windows, headlights)
- Vehicle theft or attempted theft
- Fire, lightning, short circuit
- Natural events: hail, storm, flood, falling rocks
- Animal collision (deer, boar, fox)
- Mechanical breakdown
Claims that DO affect your bonus-malus:
- At-fault RC claim: +3 degrees on the RC scale
- At-fault material damage Casco claim: movement on the Casco scale (varies by insurer)
- Shared-fault accident: partial impact, proportional to the determined fault split
This distinction is critical: you can claim for hail damage, a cracked windscreen, or a stolen radio without any impact on your premium the following year.
Expat Rules
Yes, in practice, though no legal obligation exists. Request a no-claims letter or bonus-malus attestation from your UK insurer before cancelling — ask specifically for a document listing your years of no-claims discount (NCD) level and any at-fault claims in the last five years.
Luxembourg insurers convert UK NCD into an approximate degree. A typical equivalence: 5+ years no-claims roughly equals degree 6 to 8; 9+ years roughly equals degree 3 to 5; 12+ years roughly equals degree 0 to -2. Without the document, you start at degree 11. Most insurers handle this at their discretion — present the letter and negotiate directly with the agent.
After registering your address at a Luxembourg commune, you have six months to import and re-register a foreign vehicle. During this period you must maintain a valid RC insurance policy — either your existing foreign policy (if it remains valid) or a new Luxembourg policy. After six months you risk administrative sanctions and potential insurance invalidity if your foreign policy has lapsed. EU civil servants at the EU institutions may benefit from exemptions — check with your employer's HR department.
If your vehicle is registered in Luxembourg, you must insure it with a Luxembourg-licensed insurer. If it is registered in France, a French insurer suffices and covers you during Luxembourg working hours via the Green Card. Most cross-border workers insure their vehicle in the country where it is registered.
Frontaliers with a Luxembourg-registered car should check AXA's per-kilometre option (if annual mileage is under 10,000 km) and ensure their policy explicitly covers daily cross-border commuting — which all four Luxembourg insurers include by default under the Green Card territorial clause.
Insurers Compared
For a first-time policyholder at degree 11, Foyer moov Silver or Gold is worth a quote — it offers one of the richest base coverage sets (fire, theft, glass, natural events, animal collision, assistance and legal protection all included) at a premium designed to be accessible. The trade-off is mandatory use of partner garages for all repairs. LALUX easyPROTECT Sécurité with the two damage packs is the alternative if you want garage freedom. Avoid a pure RC policy at degree 11 — without Casco or Mini Casco, a single at-fault accident leaves you paying all your vehicle repairs out of pocket while your premium jumps to degree 14.
Foyer moov Silver and Gold offer rich included guarantees at a competitive price — but with two binding constraints. First: all vehicle repairs must go through a Foyer partner garage. You cannot choose your own mechanic or body shop, even if a preferred garage is right next to your home. Second: excesses apply across the board, unlike LALUX and Baloise where the standard market practice is zero deductible. If you are comfortable with both constraints, Foyer moov can represent genuine value — particularly for its Mini Casco equivalent (Silver), which includes guarantees other insurers charge extra for.
Yes — confirmed in AXA's official formula comparison table. The Joker Taxi guarantee is included in all three OptiDrive formulas (Active, Active + Mini Casco, and Privilège) and covers all passengers when the driver is unable to drive (accident, medical event, loss of glasses, or blood alcohol above the legal limit). LALUX offers a similar LALUX Taxi service as a paid option (three return trips per year). Baloise includes taxi service in its Pack Mobilité. Foyer does not offer taxi coverage at all.
Admin & Legal
- Request a registration number from the SNCA with your ID, proof of address, and the vehicle's technical documents.
- Purchase RC insurance from one of the four licensed insurers. You receive an insurance attestation immediately, online or in person.
- Submit the full dossier to the SNCA: vehicle technical inspection, insurance attestation, proof of ownership, and proof of address.
- Receive your plates and Carte Verte (international insurance certificate) from your insurer.
For imported vehicles, the technical inspection must confirm the vehicle meets Luxembourg (EU) standards. Non-EU vehicles may require additional modifications.
Under the Act of 27 July 1997, cancellation is only possible in these situations:
- Annual renewal (Article 38): registered letter received by insurer at least 30 days before the end date. No reason required.
- Vehicle sale (Article 69): immediate termination by law on the date of sale. Notify by registered letter with a copy of the sale certificate. Refund of unused premium at pro-rata.
- Permanent departure from Luxembourg: no notice period required. Provide proof of departure. Refund at pro-rata.
- Non-contractual premium increase (Article 42): 60 days from notification by the insurer.
- After a claim settlement (Article 39): one month from the payment date.
Important: unlike France (Loi Hamon), Luxembourg has no right to cancel at any time after one year. Always subscribe to a new policy before cancelling the old one — driving without RC is a criminal offence.
- Secure the scene. Call 112 if there are any injuries. Move vehicles off the carriageway if it is safe to do so.
- Complete a European accident form (constat amiable) with the other driver. Both parties sign. Never admit fault in writing.
- Photograph everything: vehicle positions, damage, licence plates, road markings, and any witnesses' contact details.
- Notify your insurer within 8 days (the legal deadline under Luxembourg law). Contact them via phone, email, or agency visit.
- For animal collisions: file a police report before contacting your insurer — all four insurers require an official statement confirming the animal impact.
An at-fault accident adds three degrees to your RC bonus-malus. Consider whether the repair cost is lower than the premium increase over three years before declaring.
Tax Deduction
Under Article 111 of the LIR (Loi de l'Impôt sur le Revenu), the RC liability component and the driver personal accident guarantee of your premium are deductible as special expenses (dépenses spéciales) on your Luxembourg income tax return.
Ceiling: €672 per fiscal household member per year. A family of four equals a €2,688 maximum combined ceiling. This ceiling is shared with all other eligible premiums (life, health, home liability, mortgage protection) and consumer credit interest.
How to claim: request a certificat fiscal from your insurer each January. Enter the eligible premium amount on your tax return (Formulaire 100, line Dépenses spéciales). The deduction reduces your taxable income, not your tax directly — the actual saving depends on your marginal tax rate.
What is NOT deductible: the Casco (material damage) component, glass breakage, legal protection, assistance, and any options beyond RC and driver accident cover.
If your car is registered and insured in Luxembourg, the Article 111 LIR deduction is only available on your Luxembourg income tax return. Cross-border workers who pay tax in Luxembourg (most do, under the Luxembourg-France tax treaty) can claim this deduction. If you file in France, Luxembourg car insurance premiums are not deductible on the French return. Frontaliers who are entirely resident taxpayers in France may have limited access to the Luxembourg deduction — consult a cross-border tax specialist for your specific situation.